mikshaw
Group: Members
Posts: 4856
Joined: July 2004 |
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Posted: Sep. 25 2006,15:59 |
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Excluding any commercial/shareware software that might be added (Suse did that for quite a while before releasing OpenSuse), the software is still "free" in the sense that the source code of any GPL'd software is available for modification, redistribution, and unrestricted personal use. The term "free", as applied to this software, is not necessarily "free of charge". However, due to its open nature, the same software can be obtained free of charge in other places. The user has the choice of looking elsewhere, and there are hundreds of good distros available that include the same software at no charge.
I have no idea what the $9 is for, so i'm just speculating. It could be there to cover the cost of licensing proprietary windows-compatibility software.
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